Daily Breeze (Torrance)

Dodgers’ deal with Nationals is energy boost

- The world according to Jim: Jim Alexander Columnist to boo.” ”You know who every jalexander@scng.com @Jim_Alexander on Twitter

• There are two ways to look at baseball’s most frenetic trading deadline in years from a Los Angeles standpoint. The Dodgers may have made themselves unquestion­ed World Series favorites – that seems to be the way the oddsmakers leaned following the Max Scherzer/Trea Turner deal, anyway – and at least did all of L.A. a mental health service by overshadow­ing that recent 2-7 stretch against the Giants.

But it also helped energize their current/potential foes. The Giants’ trade for Kris Bryant, the Mets’ addition of Javy Baez, the Yankees’ acquisitio­n of Anthony Rizzo and Joey Gallo and the White Sox obtaining Craig Kimbrel represente­d a high number of teams rolling the dice and going for it. That’s good for baseball . ...

• How historic a trade deadline was this? In the 26 trades made Friday alone, 17 AllStars changed teams, led by Scherzer and Kimbrel with eight selections apiece. The previous high apparently was 11, in 1998 and 2019.

All told since July 15 there were 51 deals involving 138 players (plus four players to be named and two strictly cash deals), with 25 All-Stars changing hands. Greatest deadline in baseball history? You can make that case . ...

• We know this: When Scherzer takes the mound for the first time as a Dodger next week he will have an opportunit­y to become an immediate L.A. folk hero. It will be in the Ravine, in all likelihood before a full house, against the Houston Astros . ...

• Did anyone else notice the subliminal message in the Dodgers’ TV ad promoting that series, the first chance for L.A. fans to register their displeasur­e in person? “Join us and make some noise,” the voiceover announcer said. Translatio­n:

But no, I don’t think they’ll allow trash can lids into the park . ...

• One big reason for Friday’s frenzy: This was a hard deadline, with no more provision for August trades of players who have cleared waivers. That’s how Justin Verlander became an Astro in 2017 (and before that, how Adrián González became a Dodger in that big 2012 trade with Boston) . ...

• Meanwhile, if you can, spare a kind thought for our friends on the North Side of Chicago. The deadline certified the final breakup of the 2016 World Series champs with Bryant, Baez and Rizzo heading elsewhere. (Two others who had already left Chicago were swept up in Friday’s trade winds as well: Jon Lester going from Washington to St. Louis and Kyle Schwarber from the Nats to Boston.) ...

• While you’re at it, wish Nats fans well during their team’s rebuild. Only four players remain from the 2019 champions following this trading spree . ...

• Those examples, as well as the rise and fall and re-rise of the Red Sox and all of the other boom-and-bust cycles throughout the big leagues, should remind Dodger fans how lucky they’ve been since their team was liberated from the clutches of Frank McCourt in 2012.

You may not like all of the things Guggenheim ownership has done, especially involving TV coverage; SportsNet LA remained unavailabl­e on non-Spectrum cable systems even after DirectTV ended its holdout last year. And you can disagree with some of the front office’s methods, especially if you have little use for datadriven baseball. But they’ve figured out how to be competitiv­e year, not just in cycles . ...

• The other franchise that considers “rebuild” a dirty word? The Yankees. They may have been 8-1/2 games back in the division going into Friday, but they were 3-1/2 back in the AL wild-card race. More to the point, they understand the expectatio­ns of their fan base. Thus, the trades for Gallo, Rizzo, and Angels pitcher Andrew Heaney . ...

• The Angels were six games back in the wild-card race going into Friday. Their deadline moves – trading Heaney and sending reliever Tony Watson back to the Giants – may as well have been a white flag . ...

• Given the twin D.C.-to-L.A. deals this week involving the Lakers and Dodgers, the Rams got in on the fun with this tweet: “So this whole DC to LA thing ... We have a 2093 first-round pick available @Washington­NFL. Maybe Kings GM Rob Blake should have asked the Capitals about Alex Ovechkin’s availabili­ty, too, just for laughs . ...

• Isn’t it odd that most of the people ripping Simone Biles for quitting, or failing, likely have little to no expertise in gymnastics and feel obliged to fake it once every four years (or, in this case, five). The people who know the sport best seem to understand why she did what she did, and that’s good enough for me . ...

• It bears repeating: This is the most diverse sports market in North America, and it is brutally difficult to break through the noise especially as a new franchise. Adam Freier, the team’s general manager, noted at the beginning of the season that it was a long-term process to build a fan base but said he understood one key aspect of this market: “If you’re a pro sports team here, you need to be a winner.”

By getting to the championsh­ip game, his team has a chance to extend its reach.

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